Peter's Reviews > The Help
The Help
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by

Servility
This is a book that delivers on several levels: it is an entertaining and engrossing novel with drama, humour and sadness, but it also causes us to reflect on deeply moral and racial issues. While racism has existed for a long time and continues to unfold, the story provides a snap-shot into a time that is fascinating and how historically it manifested itself into society in the US. It鈥檚 a story of how servants or maids show more integrity and moral compass than their employers. It鈥檚 a story of life and communities: how we love and hate, how we laugh and cry, how we interact with family, friends and those we work with/for.
The narrative in The Help places the perspective from a white journalist, Miss Skeeter, and two black maids, Aibileen and Minny. Miss Skeeter wants to write a book using the insights both Aibileen and Minny as to what it's like to be a maid and how they are treated. This causes major concerns of trust, if they are to be open and truthful, as Minny says.
Each character is very well developed with more than just a superficial front and they show depth to the many aspects of their lives. There are other books that cover slavery, segregation and racism in the US, many are more sensational and brutal in their coverage of black subjugation, however, this book leads us to those issues in a less graphic manner for a more mainstream international audience. The stories and insights in themselves are inspiring and understanding the paradox where someone like Aibileen can be trusted to raise white children but watched suspiciously in case she steals material items, is bizarre. How maids must remain upbeat and pleasant regardless of the way they鈥檙e treated or what may be happening within their own families and personal lives. To hold the quality of someone鈥檚 life as a weapon is corrupt and repulsive, but to do it on a systemic scale is completely abhorrent.
The Help is a very clever book, perhaps meant for more global audiences as it provides an entertaining story whilst delivering these deep ethical issues. I highly recommend this book.
This is a book that delivers on several levels: it is an entertaining and engrossing novel with drama, humour and sadness, but it also causes us to reflect on deeply moral and racial issues. While racism has existed for a long time and continues to unfold, the story provides a snap-shot into a time that is fascinating and how historically it manifested itself into society in the US. It鈥檚 a story of how servants or maids show more integrity and moral compass than their employers. It鈥檚 a story of life and communities: how we love and hate, how we laugh and cry, how we interact with family, friends and those we work with/for.
The narrative in The Help places the perspective from a white journalist, Miss Skeeter, and two black maids, Aibileen and Minny. Miss Skeeter wants to write a book using the insights both Aibileen and Minny as to what it's like to be a maid and how they are treated. This causes major concerns of trust, if they are to be open and truthful, as Minny says.
鈥淚 can't believe Aibileen wants to tell Miss Skeeter the truth.
Truth.
It feels cool, like water washing over my sticky-hot body. Cooling a heat that's been burning me up all my life.
Truth, I say inside my head again, just for that feeling.鈥�
Each character is very well developed with more than just a superficial front and they show depth to the many aspects of their lives. There are other books that cover slavery, segregation and racism in the US, many are more sensational and brutal in their coverage of black subjugation, however, this book leads us to those issues in a less graphic manner for a more mainstream international audience. The stories and insights in themselves are inspiring and understanding the paradox where someone like Aibileen can be trusted to raise white children but watched suspiciously in case she steals material items, is bizarre. How maids must remain upbeat and pleasant regardless of the way they鈥檙e treated or what may be happening within their own families and personal lives. To hold the quality of someone鈥檚 life as a weapon is corrupt and repulsive, but to do it on a systemic scale is completely abhorrent.
The Help is a very clever book, perhaps meant for more global audiences as it provides an entertaining story whilst delivering these deep ethical issues. I highly recommend this book.
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Reading Progress
December 29, 2016
– Shelved
Started Reading
July 12, 2017
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Finished Reading
January 24, 2018
– Shelved as:
literary-fiction
February 11, 2018
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Peter
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rated it 5 stars
Nov 25, 2018 04:06AM

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Thank you again, Diane, I really appreciate your support. :):)

Delighted that you enjoyed the book Richard, it's probably one of those iconic books now. Thanks for your comment.

It's a great book to read and I think you would really like it. Thanks for your lovely comment, Beata.

Thanks very much, Paula, I really appreciate the kind words. :):)

Thank you so much, Jennifer, and great to hear you loved it as well. :):)

Thank you very much, Beata. I hope you enjoy this one as much as I did. :):)

Thank you very much Margaret Mary, I appreciate that. :):)

Thank you very much, Paromjit, it's a modern classic and glad you loved this one too. :):)


It was a classic Ann and I'm delighted you loved it so much. Thanks for the kind comment. :):)

You said a lot here in a rather compact review. I actually reread this book recently, and I ended up enjoying it even more than I did the first time. You're so right; this book does an excellent job at showing the strange nuances of what was daily racism at that time. As you wrote, the "paradox where someone like Aibileen can be trusted to raise white children but watched suspiciously in case she steals material items, is bizarre." Yes, raise my kids, but don't use my bathroom. Wha??
I reread this book as a further study for Voice. I love the writers who manage to do it well. Kathryn Stockett does a great job with it, and it still surprises me that this was her debut offering.

You said a lot here in a rather compact review. I actually reread this book recently, and I ended up enjoying it even more than I did the first time. You're so right; this book does an excel..."
Thank you very much, Julie. What was really well done in the story was to mainstream it, and bring out the racism in such a clear and acknowledged way. I agree as a debut it was remarkable. :):)